Institute of Cardiac Sciences, Sheikh Khalifa Medical City, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.
PLoS One. 2011;6(9):e24357. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0024357. Epub 2011 Sep 7.
There is increasing interest to make primary data from published research publicly available. We aimed to assess the current status of making research data available in highly-cited journals across the scientific literature.
We reviewed the first 10 original research papers of 2009 published in the 50 original research journals with the highest impact factor. For each journal we documented the policies related to public availability and sharing of data. Of the 50 journals, 44 (88%) had a statement in their instructions to authors related to public availability and sharing of data. However, there was wide variation in journal requirements, ranging from requiring the sharing of all primary data related to the research to just including a statement in the published manuscript that data can be available on request. Of the 500 assessed papers, 149 (30%) were not subject to any data availability policy. Of the remaining 351 papers that were covered by some data availability policy, 208 papers (59%) did not fully adhere to the data availability instructions of the journals they were published in, most commonly (73%) by not publicly depositing microarray data. The other 143 papers that adhered to the data availability instructions did so by publicly depositing only the specific data type as required, making a statement of willingness to share, or actually sharing all the primary data. Overall, only 47 papers (9%) deposited full primary raw data online. None of the 149 papers not subject to data availability policies made their full primary data publicly available.
A substantial proportion of original research papers published in high-impact journals are either not subject to any data availability policies, or do not adhere to the data availability instructions in their respective journals. This empiric evaluation highlights opportunities for improvement.
越来越多的人希望将已发表研究的原始数据公开。我们旨在评估在整个科学文献中高引用期刊发表的研究数据的可用性现状。
我们回顾了 2009 年发表在影响因子最高的 50 种原始研究期刊的前 10 篇原始研究论文。对于每种期刊,我们记录了与数据公开和共享相关的政策。在这 50 种期刊中,有 44 种(88%)在投稿须知中对数据的公开可用性和共享做出了相关规定。然而,期刊的要求差异很大,从要求共享与研究相关的所有原始数据到仅在发表的手稿中声明数据可根据要求提供。在评估的 500 篇论文中,有 149 篇(30%)不受任何数据可用性政策的约束。在其余 351 篇受某些数据可用性政策约束的论文中,有 208 篇(59%)未完全遵守其发表期刊的数据可用性说明,最常见的情况是(73%)未公开存放微阵列数据。其余 143 篇遵守数据可用性说明的论文是通过仅公开存放按要求所需的特定数据类型、发表愿意共享的声明或实际共享所有原始数据来实现的。总体而言,只有 47 篇论文(9%)在线完整地存放了原始数据。没有任何一篇不受数据可用性政策约束的论文公开了其全部原始数据。
相当一部分发表在高影响力期刊上的原始研究论文要么不受任何数据可用性政策的约束,要么不遵守其所属期刊的数据可用性说明。这种实证评估突出了改进的机会。